THe 10 Commandments are in the Old Testament. The Christian, Jewish, and Muslim faiths all split from the early Jewish faith. All three religions beleive in the Ten Commandments and all of the Old Testament.
2007-03-05 21:16:28
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answer #1
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answered by Tim H 5
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I know that there are English translations of the Koran (my friend has one with English on one side, Arabic on a facing page, and I've seen them in the library).
I don't know about the ten commandments thing. Muslims are meant to have five pillars of faith if I understand it right, one is a pilgrimage to Mecca, I think another is accepting Mohammed as a prophet, there might be the daily prayer rituals in there as well, month of fasting, and I can't remember the fifth.
I haven't known any Muslim to disagree with the ten commandments.
Better ask this in the religion section.
2007-03-05 21:12:37
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answer #2
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answered by dude 5
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All 10 commandments are mentioned in the Koran in various places. You can easily find a translation online through a search engine.
2007-03-05 21:14:14
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answer #3
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answered by mrsahmedhashmi 1
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Here are the 10 comadments in the Koran ,, In Al-Anaam chapter verses no. 151-152-153
151. Say, "Come, I will recite what your Lord has prohibited to you. [He commands] that you not associate anything with Him, and to parents, good treatment, and do not kill your children out of poverty; We will provide for you and them. And do not approach immoralities – what is apparent of them and what is concealed. And do not kill the soul which Allāh has forbidden [to be killed] except by [legal] right. This has He instructed you that you may use reason."
152. And do not approach the orphan's property except in a way that is best until he reaches maturity. And give full measure and weight in justice. We do not charge any soul except [with that within] its capacity. And when you testify, be just, even if [it concerns] a near relative. And the covenant of Allāh fulfill. This has He instructed you that you may remember.
153. And, [moreover], this is My path, which is straight, so follow it; and do not follow [other] ways, for you will be separated from His way. This has He instructed you that you may become righteous.
2014-07-26 10:21:31
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answer #4
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answered by chocola 1
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exciting question. I examine English and Arabic, not German or French, so I won't attempt to respond to for those languages. interior the translations to English there are diverse methodolgies. some attempt to stick to be conscious-for-be conscious as lots because of fact the language flow helps, and any further rationalization is inserted with parentheses around the reason. Others in simple terms incorporate this further explication in the textual content fabric. i think the 1st way is extra suitable as some authors, like the Wahabi Saudis, are turning out to be incredibly loose with putting their own suggestions into the physique of the Holy, unchangeable Quran. yet great sections the place there are secrets and techniques being saved? i've got not seen any variations like that from Arabic to English. Salaamu Alaykum Wa Rahmatullahi Wa Barakatuh -- Peace be on you and Allah's Mercy and His advantages. (a rather lots be conscious-for-be conscious translation, by potential of how, besides the undeniable fact that, i'm going to be extra advantageous to explicate this. Salaam -- peace; alay -- on; kum -- you plural; wa - and; rahma - mercy -- allah - God, Allah; hi -- a suffix meaning belonging to him; wa - and; baraka- mercy; h -- the h could nicely be like this or HU and that they the two seek advice from the mercy belonging to Him. Chow, adios, peace-out and see you later.
2016-10-17 09:29:31
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Unlike in the jewish and christian bibles there is no 10 commandments that are together in the Koran. Mind you if you read the Qur'an you find parallels with the bible in several areas.
here is a The numbers are the commandments and where they are located. the section below is where similar verses are located in the Qur'an.
The Ten Commandments
(Exodus 20: 1-17 & Deuteronomy 5: 6-21) Confirmation in the Quran
(Chapter: Verse)
1 Thou shall not take any god except one God. 1 "There is no other god beside GOD,"(47:19)
He is the one God; there is no other god beside Him. ......(28:70)
2 Thou shall make no image of God. 2 There is nothing that equals (like) Him. (42:11)
No visions can encompass Him, but He
encompasses all visions. He is the Compassionate, the Cognizant.[6:103]
"My Lord, make this a peaceful land, and protect me and my children from worshiping idols. (14:35)
3 Thou shall not use God's name in vain. 3 Do not subject GOD's name to your casual swearing, that you may appear righteous, pious,
or to attain credibility among the people. (2:224)
4 Thou shall honor thy mother and father. 4 . ....and your parents shall be
honored. As long as one or
both of them live, you shall
never say to them, "Uff"
(the slightest gesture of annoyance),
nor shall you shout at them; you
shall treat them amicably. (17:23)
5 Thou shall not steal. 5 The thief, male or female, you shall mark their hands as a punishment for their crime, and
to serve as an example from GOD. GOD is Almighty, Most Wise. (5:38 - 39)
6 Thou shall not lie or give false testimony. 6 ..... incur GOD's condemnation upon him, if he was lying. (24:7)
Do not withhold any testimony by concealing what you had witnessed. Anyone who withholds
a testimony is sinful at heart. (2:283)
O you who believe, you shall be absolutely
equitable, and observe GOD, when you serve as witnesses, even against yourselves, or your parents, or your relatives. Whether the accused is rich or poor, GOD takes care of both. Therefore, do not be biased by your personal wishes. If you deviate or disregard (this commandment), then GOD is fully Cognizant of
everything you do.[4:135]
7 Thou shall not kill. 7 ....anyone who murders any person who had not committed murder or horrendous crimes, it shall be as if he murdered all the people. (5:32)
"You shall not kill any person - for God has made life sacred - except in the course of justice. If one is killed unjustly, then we give his heir authority to enforce justice. Thus, he shall not exceed the limits in avenging the murder, he will be helped."(17:33)
8 Thou shall not commit adultery. 8 You shall not commit adultery;
it is a gross sin, and an evil behavior.
(17:32)
9 Thou shall not covet thy neighbors
wife or possessions. 9 You shall regard the parents, the relatives, the orphans, the poor, the related neighbor, the unrelated neighbor, the close associate, the traveling alien, and your servants. (4:36)
And do not covet what we bestowed
upon any other people. Such are temporary
ornaments of this life, whereby we put them to
the test. What your Lord provides for you is far
better, and everlasting.[20:131]
10 Thou shall keep the Sabbath holy. 10 *the Sabbath was relinquished with the
revelation of the Quran. We are told in
the Quran that the Sabbath was only
decreed for the Jews. (16:124)
God, however ,ordered us to make every
effort and drop all businesses to attend the
congregational (Friday)prayer. The Submitters
may tend to their business during the rest of
the day.
O you who believe, when the
Congregational Prayer (Salat
Al-Jumu`ah) is announced on Friday,
you shall hasten to the commemoration
of GOD, and drop all business. . (62:9)
The Qur'an has been translated into english numerous time.s
2007-03-05 21:19:14
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answer #6
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answered by Adorabilly 5
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I think we have the 25 golden rules given to us by the last prophet Mohammad (Peace Be Upon Him) for a good life here and here after
I am not sure about an english translation
2007-03-05 21:13:54
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answer #7
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answered by Adnan S 3
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I am assured by Moslem colleagues that the Ten Commandments - and indeed, much of what Christians refer to as the Old Testament - is incorporated into the Koran.
2007-03-05 21:17:04
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answer #8
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answered by GrahamH 7
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This shows you don't understand the history if the Islamic faith at all.
The Koran references the Jewish "Torah" and the early version of the Bible.
The 10 commandments are included by reference.
Islam is in a way a division of Christianity, similar to the way Mormonism is. They both claim to have extended "revelation" in their books. They both build on the Judeo-Christian belief system. And... both are seen as heresy by most "fundamentalist" Christian groups.
2007-03-05 21:15:33
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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